I was very interested to see that organizations are starting to provide a better Customer Experience to those people have more social influence. You may have heard of Klout. It is a service that measures your ‘influence’ in social media. I was interested to read in Forbes that Genesys has integrated Klout scores into their technology offering. Therefore, I guess if you have a high Klout score you could provide a ‘better’ service than people with an average score or no score at all.
I presume this means you may decide to respond faster to these individuals, allocate more capable individuals to dealing with these people, or provide them with offers in the hope they will ‘influence’ others. We all know celebrities are paid to be seen wearing/using certain products due to their influence on others. This is the first time I have seen this potentially being used for more ‘normal’ people. You could argue this is what celebrities do all the time and what we are seeing is another form of celebrity status with a high degree of social influence.
It raises some interesting questions… I have been in a debate with a follower on twitter @ruugie about whether this is morally correct. In my view it is OK and just again an extension of Human nature. When I was speaking at a conference recently, a representative from Four Seasons hotels stated they looked at the number of followers to determine how influential these people are. I wrote about Morton’s, delivering a steak meal to an airport as a person with a high number of followers said that he would love a steak. Organizations are doing this anyway; it appears technology companies are enabling this to happen in a more efficient way.
We are always advising our clients to focus on what drives ‘value’ for them. We emphasise that we are in business to make money. We normally determine value as being increased expenditure, Customer retention, Customer loyalty, (NPS®) Net Promoter Score®. Social influence is another value indicator….
Anyway with a Klout score of 41 I am off to increase my Klout score so I can get a better level of service!
Colin Shaw is founder & CEO of Beyond Philosophy, one of the world’s first organizations devoted to customer experience. Colin is an international author of four best-selling books. Beyond Philosophy provide consulting, specialised research & training from offices in Atlanta, Georgia and London, England. Follow Colin Shaw on Twitter: @ColinShaw_CX |